Friday, May 29, 2015

Nurse Nancy rides again

As a young girl, I decided to be a
nurse when I grew up. It was like a holy calling, and I thoroughly romanticized
the profession. In my day-dreams, I rode a horse as I went on house calls
through the countryside, arriving just in time to rescue despairing children
and save lives.

It’s not that I didn’t do my
homework. I actually undertook my first research project at the age of eight on
the subject of nurses. Aided by my father and the local library, I scanned
books and encyclopedia articles, coming up with a manuscript several chapters
long and fully illustrated. My parents supplied me with a box of 32 brand new
Crayolas for the project. I imaginatively entitled it, “Nurses.”

That was all well and good until,
in the messiness of Real Life, I discovered I did not have a stomach for blood,
vomit and such. Gradually, my holy calling slipped by the way side.

My next calling was to be an
actress. Not a movie star, but a Serious Actress. On stage. In the
pre-adolescent years, a friend and I formed a neighborhood drama club. Our intention
was to write and produce plays for the all the people, adults and children, who
lived around us. The dreaming and planning part was fun, and we came up with
several notebooks of well-drawn costume designs. But we never managed to
actually produce any plays. But I did write skits for our church youth group
and gained somewhat of a reputation as a playwright. The three-act murder
mystery I wrote in the 7th grade was put on by my classmates for the
whole middle school, with parents invited. I insisted on playing the lead role,
figuring I had that right since I wrote the play. (The role happened to be the
criminal, the maid who actually “dunit.”) It was all great fun.

My participation in high school
drama further cemented my resolve not to go to college, but to enroll in the
Pasadena Playhouse for professional training. Somehow, in the mysterious ways
of God’s interventions, I ended up at George Fox College. Granted, my first
major was in theater, but after one year that gave way to world literature,
which by my junior year had become Spanish. I graduated with a Spanish major
and a desire to serve God overseas. Another holy calling.

Down through the years it’s dawned
on me that my first calling is to write, whether it’s an illustrated volume
entitled “Nurses,” a three-act murder mystery, or a manual on writing designed
to help Bolivian Quakers write their own materials. I’ve gradually come to
describe my vocation as being “to discover and express the grace of God, hidden
in the ordinariness of life.” I can carry that out no matter what particular
task I happen to be doing, wherever I happen to be doing it.

At the moment the place is our
home in Newberg and the task is to nurse Hal back to health. It comes full
circle. Nurse Nancy is back in the saddle.

After several weeks battling an
infection, Hal had emergency surgery to open a blocked bladder. It was an “in-and-out”
operation, and after about six hours in the hospital, I brought him home. That
was last week. Since then, we’ve followed a regimented schedule of medications,
rest, exercise, rest, meals, and more rest. It’s Hal that does the resting, not
me. But I’ve discovered that even emptying urine bags can become so routine as
to lose all offensiveness. To help break the monotony, we’re watching “Foyle’s
War” on Netflix. We’re going to manage to get in all the episodes, from all
seven series.

And can you guess where God’s
grace is hiding these days? It’s right here in our apartment. In abundance.

8 comments:

Foyle's War ought to be watched in succession like that. What a treat! If you run out of material, try Blue Bloods. Another great series. This is the kind of response you expect from a spiritual friend, right?

Nancy, we couldn't locate your latest recommendations. I believe they are on Netflix. We'd actually welcome any list of movies and series you find especially captivating. Johan, I would trust your recommendations as well.

Yes, this is a fine place to chat. The patient is impatient to get the catheter out, but that happens (God willing) tomorrow. We have so many friends struggling with cancer right now, our struggles seem minor. But we'll be glad when it's over.